Whiteclay, Nebraska is a tiny unincorporated town that sits on the border with South Dakota. Until its closure by state officials, its four liquor stores sold more than 4m cans of beer a year, almost entirely to members of Lakota Sioux tribe on the Pine RidgeIndian reservation, where the sale of alcohol is banned. The Guardian spent time on the reservation to understand the impact of alcohol on its residents – and the activists and Lakota tribe members determined to keep the town closed
View the video at https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2017/sep/29/fighting-addiction-on-pine-ridge-reservation-video

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

published:08 Jan 2014

views:37819

published:23 Jul 2017

views:830

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040

published:12 May 2012

views:339572

Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala LakotaSioux tribe. Covering an area roughly the size of the state of Connecticut, it's an isolated place of both majestic beauty and abject poverty. It's considered to be the poorest part of the United States with around 85 per cent unemployment and the average family income is little more than 6,000 dollars a year. When it comes to sport, Basketball is by far the most popular here, as it is on most Indian Reservations. Many tribes promote the sport and see it as a way of keeping Native youths away from the problems of drugs and alcohol, which blight so many of their communities.
Subscribe to Trans World Sport: http://goo.gl/5kBsQ
TWS features sports action from around the globe, including reports from the biggest international competitions, in-depth features on lesser-known sports and profiles of rising stars of the future.
Follow us:
http://twitter.com/TransWorldSport
Like us on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/transworldsport87

The collective geographical area of all reservations is 56,200,000 acres (22,700,000ha; 87,800sqmi; 227,000km2), approximately the size of Idaho. While most reservations are small compared to US states, there are twelve Indian reservations larger than the state of Rhode Island. The largest reservation, the Navajo Nation Reservation, is similar in size to West Virginia. Reservations are unevenly distributed throughout the country; the majority are west of the Mississippi River and occupy lands that were first reserved by treaty or 'granted' from the public domain.

South Dakota is bordered by the states of North Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Montana. The state is bisected by the Missouri River, dividing South Dakota into two geographically and socially distinct halves, known to residents as "East River" and "West River". Eastern South Dakota is home to most of the state's population, and fertile soil in this area is used to grow a variety of crops. West of the Missouri, ranching is the predominant agricultural activity, and the economy is more dependent on tourism and defense spending. The Black Hills, a group of low pine-covered mountains sacred to the Sioux, are located in the southwest part of the state. Mount Rushmore, a major tourist destination, is located there. South Dakota experiences a temperate continental climate, with four distinct seasons and precipitation ranging from moderate in the east to semi-arid in the west. The ecology of the state features species typical of a North American grassland biome.

Ridge

A ridge or mountain ridge is a geological feature consisting of a chain of mountains or hills that form a continuous elevated crest for some distance. Ridges are usually termed hills or mountains as well, depending on size. There are several main types of ridges:-

Dendritic ridge:- In typical dissected plateau terrain, the stream drainage valleys will leave intervening ridges. These are by far the most common ridges. These ridges usually represent slightly more erosion resistant rock, but not always – they often remain because there were more joints where the valleys formed, or other chance occurrences. This type of ridge is generally somewhat random in orientation, often changing direction frequently, often with knobs at intervals on the ridge top.

Stratigraphic ridge:- In places such as the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians, long, even, straight ridges are formed because they are the uneroded remaining edges of the more resistant dippingstrata that were folded laterally. Similar ridges have formed in places such as the Black Hills, where the ridges form concentric circles around the igneous core. Sometimes these ridges are called "hogback ridges".

Liquid genocide: fighting addiction on Pine Ridge reservation

Whiteclay, Nebraska is a tiny unincorporated town that sits on the border with South Dakota. Until its closure by state officials, its four liquor stores sold more than 4m cans of beer a year, almost entirely to members of Lakota Sioux tribe on the Pine RidgeIndian reservation, where the sale of alcohol is banned. The Guardian spent time on the reservation to understand the impact of alcohol on its residents – and the activists and Lakota tribe members determined to keep the town closed
View the video at https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2017/sep/29/fighting-addiction-on-pine-ridge-reservation-video

[300] Pine Ridge Reservation Part I: Where Despair Meets Hope

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

9:15

The Children Of Pine Ridge

The Children Of Pine Ridge

The Children Of Pine Ridge

24:41

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

Welcome to Pine Ridge

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 1)

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040

11:49

Basketball on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Trans World Sport

Basketball on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Trans World Sport

Basketball on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Trans World Sport

Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala LakotaSioux tribe. Covering an area roughly the size of the state of Connecticut, it's an isolated place of both majestic beauty and abject poverty. It's considered to be the poorest part of the United States with around 85 per cent unemployment and the average family income is little more than 6,000 dollars a year. When it comes to sport, Basketball is by far the most popular here, as it is on most Indian Reservations. Many tribes promote the sport and see it as a way of keeping Native youths away from the problems of drugs and alcohol, which blight so many of their communities.
Subscribe to Trans World Sport: http://goo.gl/5kBsQ
TWS features sports action from around the globe, including reports from the biggest international competitions, in-depth features on lesser-known sports and profiles of rising stars of the future.
Follow us:
http://twitter.com/TransWorldSport
Like us on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/transworldsport87

First Project | Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

*DONATE TODAY: www.inourhands.love*
Instagram:
@inourhands.love
Twitter:
@inourhands_love
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/inourhands.l...
LinkedIn:
inourhands.love
inourhands.love has officially partnered with the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Their story is a paradigm of the hardships facing many American Indian tribes, but it is also representative of the resilience and hope that exists in community and innovation.
The Oglala Lakota faces many of the same economic challenges as other American Indian nations across the country. As HenryRed Cloud states in the video above, unemployment on the Pine Ridge Reservation, which has a population of 40,000, has reached a harrowing 86%. The median income of those who are employed is between $2,600-$3,500 a year, which means that 97% of the population lives below the federal poverty line.
Like their neighbors, the Standing Rock Sioux, the Oglala Lakota deal with the irony of pipelines running through their sovereign land, which the United States uses to transport oil that, eventually, American Indians are forced to buy back in the form of petroleum. By providing the Oglala Lakota Nation with a means of producing their own energy and jobs, inourhands.love helps keep that money on the reservation.
Working with LakotaSolar Enterprises (LSE) and the Red Cloud Renewable EnergyCenter (RCREC), inourhands.love aims to fund the installation of solar panels on Pine Ridge, providing clean and affordable energy to a region where nearly 40% of homes lack electricity.
inourhands.love believes that energy should be equitable and that all communities – and the individuals that comprise them – should have the agency to change and improve. For Native American Nations, the difficulties extend one step further; they are sovereign nations surrounded by a foreign government over which they have limited (or no) control but on which they are forced to depend for basic resources. While the past is marked by turmoil and injustice, there is hope, going forward, to create a brighter future, not only for disadvantaged communities, but for the world that we all share.
We’ve said this before and we’ll say it again: the most powerful gift is that of freedom; the ability to decide for oneself how the future will be. YOU have the power to return the freedom that some communities have lost to forces beyond their control.
By donating to inourhands.love, you directly contribute to transitioning communities like the Oglala Lakota Nation towards energy independence. Not only does your dollar create healthier and happier communities, it helps people reclaim their own destinies.

38:19

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

The Oglala Sioux of Pine Ridge Reservation

“Don’t forget about us.” A horesback ride to the poorest place in the United States

“Don’t forget about us.” A horesback ride to the poorest place in the United States

“Don’t forget about us.” A horesback ride to the poorest place in the United States

9NEWS STORYTELLERS: Pine Ridge, South Dakota is the poorest place in the United States. It's an Indian Reservation where families live in abject poverty. A group rode on horseback from Boulder, Colorado to Pine Ridge to raise money and awareness for the people who live there.
Previous video: https://youtu.be/FH6FHn1_op0
Stay connected:
9News Website: http://www.9news.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ilike9news
Twitter: https://twitter.com/9NEWS
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/9newsdenver/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+9news/posts
Snapchat: Denver9NEWS
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/9news/

3:50

Mysterious hole appears on Pine Ridge reservation

Mysterious hole appears on Pine Ridge reservation

Mysterious hole appears on Pine Ridge reservation

*NEW 2014 UPDATE* check this channel's videos...Lisa saw a very bright light overhead and then heard the dogs going crazy in the front yard. Her and Woody looked and discovered a smoldering hole. At first I assumed there was a "loud boom" when it happened but Lisa has corrected me and said there was NO NOISE. Most think some thing came down and impacted the Earth. I think some thing could've shot out. What do you think? What dirt that was in the hole was and is still very fine and powdery. There were little grass roots that were dangling from the sides of the hole,undamaged.No machine marks, no dirt outside the hole when found either. The very top of this hole is still basically how it looked when it was found. Woody is trying to dig down and around the entry/exit point in hopes to find a rare element. Part 2 coming soon with interviews and original still photos from right after it was found.

Liquid genocide: fighting addiction on Pine Ridge reservation

Whiteclay, Nebraska is a tiny unincorporated town that sits on the border with South Dakota. Until its closure by state officials, its four liquor stores sold more than 4m cans of beer a year, almost entirely to members of Lakota Sioux tribe on the Pine RidgeIndian reservation, where the sale of alcohol is banned. The Guardian spent time on the reservation to understand the impact of alcohol on its residents – and the activists and Lakota tribe members determined to keep the town closed
View the video at https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2017/sep/29/fighting-addiction-on-pine-ridge-reservation-video

Pine Ridge Reservation Disaster Area

[300] Pine Ridge Reservation Part I: Where Despair Meets Hope

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implica...

published: 08 Jan 2014

The Children Of Pine Ridge

published: 23 Jul 2017

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no...

Welcome to Pine Ridge

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 1)

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there a...

published: 12 May 2012

Basketball on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Trans World Sport

Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala LakotaSioux tribe. Covering an area roughly the size of the state of Connecticut, it's an isolated place of both majestic beauty and abject poverty. It's considered to be the poorest part of the United States with around 85 per cent unemployment and the average family income is little more than 6,000 dollars a year. When it comes to sport, Basketball is by far the most popular here, as it is on most Indian Reservations. Many tribes promote the sport and see it as a way of keeping Native youths away from the problems of drugs and alcohol, which blight so many of their communities.
Subscribe to Trans World Sport: http://goo.gl/5kBsQ
TWS features sports action from around the globe, including reports from the biggest internationa...

First Project | Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

*DONATE TODAY: www.inourhands.love*
Instagram:
@inourhands.love
Twitter:
@inourhands_love
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/inourhands.l...
LinkedIn:
inourhands.love
inourhands.love has officially partnered with the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Their story is a paradigm of the hardships facing many American Indian tribes, but it is also representative of the resilience and hope that exists in community and innovation.
The Oglala Lakota faces many of the same economic challenges as other American Indian nations across the country. As HenryRed Cloud states in the video above, unemployment on the Pine Ridge Reservation, which has a population of 40,000, has reached a harrowing 86%. The median income of those who are employed is be...

published: 07 Jan 2018

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

The Oglala Sioux of Pine Ridge Reservation

“Don’t forget about us.” A horesback ride to the poorest place in the United States

9NEWS STORYTELLERS: Pine Ridge, South Dakota is the poorest place in the United States. It's an Indian Reservation where families live in abject poverty. A group rode on horseback from Boulder, Colorado to Pine Ridge to raise money and awareness for the people who live there.
Previous video: https://youtu.be/FH6FHn1_op0
Stay connected:
9News Website: http://www.9news.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ilike9news
Twitter: https://twitter.com/9NEWS
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/9newsdenver/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+9news/posts
Snapchat: Denver9NEWS
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/9news/

published: 01 Oct 2016

Mysterious hole appears on Pine Ridge reservation

*NEW 2014 UPDATE* check this channel's videos...Lisa saw a very bright light overhead and then heard the dogs going crazy in the front yard. Her and Woody looked and discovered a smoldering hole. At first I assumed there was a "loud boom" when it happened but Lisa has corrected me and said there was NO NOISE. Most think some thing came down and impacted the Earth. I think some thing could've shot out. What do you think? What dirt that was in the hole was and is still very fine and powdery. There were little grass roots that were dangling from the sides of the hole,undamaged.No machine marks, no dirt outside the hole when found either. The very top of this hole is still basically how it looked when it was found. Woody is trying to dig down and around the entry/exit point in hopes to find a...

Whiteclay, Nebraska is a tiny unincorporated town that sits on the border with South Dakota. Until its closure by state officials, its four liquor stores sold more than 4m cans of beer a year, almost entirely to members of Lakota Sioux tribe on the Pine RidgeIndian reservation, where the sale of alcohol is banned. The Guardian spent time on the reservation to understand the impact of alcohol on its residents – and the activists and Lakota tribe members determined to keep the town closed
View the video at https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2017/sep/29/fighting-addiction-on-pine-ridge-reservation-video

Whiteclay, Nebraska is a tiny unincorporated town that sits on the border with South Dakota. Until its closure by state officials, its four liquor stores sold more than 4m cans of beer a year, almost entirely to members of Lakota Sioux tribe on the Pine RidgeIndian reservation, where the sale of alcohol is banned. The Guardian spent time on the reservation to understand the impact of alcohol on its residents – and the activists and Lakota tribe members determined to keep the town closed
View the video at https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2017/sep/29/fighting-addiction-on-pine-ridge-reservation-video

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
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RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
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Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040

Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala LakotaSioux tribe. Covering an area roughly the size of the state of Connecticut, it's an isolated place of both majestic beauty and abject poverty. It's considered to be the poorest part of the United States with around 85 per cent unemployment and the average family income is little more than 6,000 dollars a year. When it comes to sport, Basketball is by far the most popular here, as it is on most Indian Reservations. Many tribes promote the sport and see it as a way of keeping Native youths away from the problems of drugs and alcohol, which blight so many of their communities.
Subscribe to Trans World Sport: http://goo.gl/5kBsQ
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Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala LakotaSioux tribe. Covering an area roughly the size of the state of Connecticut, it's an isolated place of both majestic beauty and abject poverty. It's considered to be the poorest part of the United States with around 85 per cent unemployment and the average family income is little more than 6,000 dollars a year. When it comes to sport, Basketball is by far the most popular here, as it is on most Indian Reservations. Many tribes promote the sport and see it as a way of keeping Native youths away from the problems of drugs and alcohol, which blight so many of their communities.
Subscribe to Trans World Sport: http://goo.gl/5kBsQ
TWS features sports action from around the globe, including reports from the biggest international competitions, in-depth features on lesser-known sports and profiles of rising stars of the future.
Follow us:
http://twitter.com/TransWorldSport
Like us on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/transworldsport87

*DONATE TODAY: www.inourhands.love*
Instagram:
@inourhands.love
Twitter:
@inourhands_love
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/inourhands.l...
LinkedIn:
inourhands.love
inourhands.love has officially partnered with the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Their story is a paradigm of the hardships facing many American Indian tribes, but it is also representative of the resilience and hope that exists in community and innovation.
The Oglala Lakota faces many of the same economic challenges as other American Indian nations across the country. As HenryRed Cloud states in the video above, unemployment on the Pine Ridge Reservation, which has a population of 40,000, has reached a harrowing 86%. The median income of those who are employed is between $2,600-$3,500 a year, which means that 97% of the population lives below the federal poverty line.
Like their neighbors, the Standing Rock Sioux, the Oglala Lakota deal with the irony of pipelines running through their sovereign land, which the United States uses to transport oil that, eventually, American Indians are forced to buy back in the form of petroleum. By providing the Oglala Lakota Nation with a means of producing their own energy and jobs, inourhands.love helps keep that money on the reservation.
Working with LakotaSolar Enterprises (LSE) and the Red Cloud Renewable EnergyCenter (RCREC), inourhands.love aims to fund the installation of solar panels on Pine Ridge, providing clean and affordable energy to a region where nearly 40% of homes lack electricity.
inourhands.love believes that energy should be equitable and that all communities – and the individuals that comprise them – should have the agency to change and improve. For Native American Nations, the difficulties extend one step further; they are sovereign nations surrounded by a foreign government over which they have limited (or no) control but on which they are forced to depend for basic resources. While the past is marked by turmoil and injustice, there is hope, going forward, to create a brighter future, not only for disadvantaged communities, but for the world that we all share.
We’ve said this before and we’ll say it again: the most powerful gift is that of freedom; the ability to decide for oneself how the future will be. YOU have the power to return the freedom that some communities have lost to forces beyond their control.
By donating to inourhands.love, you directly contribute to transitioning communities like the Oglala Lakota Nation towards energy independence. Not only does your dollar create healthier and happier communities, it helps people reclaim their own destinies.

*DONATE TODAY: www.inourhands.love*
Instagram:
@inourhands.love
Twitter:
@inourhands_love
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/inourhands.l...
LinkedIn:
inourhands.love
inourhands.love has officially partnered with the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Their story is a paradigm of the hardships facing many American Indian tribes, but it is also representative of the resilience and hope that exists in community and innovation.
The Oglala Lakota faces many of the same economic challenges as other American Indian nations across the country. As HenryRed Cloud states in the video above, unemployment on the Pine Ridge Reservation, which has a population of 40,000, has reached a harrowing 86%. The median income of those who are employed is between $2,600-$3,500 a year, which means that 97% of the population lives below the federal poverty line.
Like their neighbors, the Standing Rock Sioux, the Oglala Lakota deal with the irony of pipelines running through their sovereign land, which the United States uses to transport oil that, eventually, American Indians are forced to buy back in the form of petroleum. By providing the Oglala Lakota Nation with a means of producing their own energy and jobs, inourhands.love helps keep that money on the reservation.
Working with LakotaSolar Enterprises (LSE) and the Red Cloud Renewable EnergyCenter (RCREC), inourhands.love aims to fund the installation of solar panels on Pine Ridge, providing clean and affordable energy to a region where nearly 40% of homes lack electricity.
inourhands.love believes that energy should be equitable and that all communities – and the individuals that comprise them – should have the agency to change and improve. For Native American Nations, the difficulties extend one step further; they are sovereign nations surrounded by a foreign government over which they have limited (or no) control but on which they are forced to depend for basic resources. While the past is marked by turmoil and injustice, there is hope, going forward, to create a brighter future, not only for disadvantaged communities, but for the world that we all share.
We’ve said this before and we’ll say it again: the most powerful gift is that of freedom; the ability to decide for oneself how the future will be. YOU have the power to return the freedom that some communities have lost to forces beyond their control.
By donating to inourhands.love, you directly contribute to transitioning communities like the Oglala Lakota Nation towards energy independence. Not only does your dollar create healthier and happier communities, it helps people reclaim their own destinies.

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

9NEWS STORYTELLERS: Pine Ridge, South Dakota is the poorest place in the United States. It's an Indian Reservation where families live in abject poverty. A group rode on horseback from Boulder, Colorado to Pine Ridge to raise money and awareness for the people who live there.
Previous video: https://youtu.be/FH6FHn1_op0
Stay connected:
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9NEWS STORYTELLERS: Pine Ridge, South Dakota is the poorest place in the United States. It's an Indian Reservation where families live in abject poverty. A group rode on horseback from Boulder, Colorado to Pine Ridge to raise money and awareness for the people who live there.
Previous video: https://youtu.be/FH6FHn1_op0
Stay connected:
9News Website: http://www.9news.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ilike9news
Twitter: https://twitter.com/9NEWS
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/9newsdenver/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+9news/posts
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Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/9news/

*NEW 2014 UPDATE* check this channel's videos...Lisa saw a very bright light overhead and then heard the dogs going crazy in the front yard. Her and Woody looked and discovered a smoldering hole. At first I assumed there was a "loud boom" when it happened but Lisa has corrected me and said there was NO NOISE. Most think some thing came down and impacted the Earth. I think some thing could've shot out. What do you think? What dirt that was in the hole was and is still very fine and powdery. There were little grass roots that were dangling from the sides of the hole,undamaged.No machine marks, no dirt outside the hole when found either. The very top of this hole is still basically how it looked when it was found. Woody is trying to dig down and around the entry/exit point in hopes to find a rare element. Part 2 coming soon with interviews and original still photos from right after it was found.

*NEW 2014 UPDATE* check this channel's videos...Lisa saw a very bright light overhead and then heard the dogs going crazy in the front yard. Her and Woody looked and discovered a smoldering hole. At first I assumed there was a "loud boom" when it happened but Lisa has corrected me and said there was NO NOISE. Most think some thing came down and impacted the Earth. I think some thing could've shot out. What do you think? What dirt that was in the hole was and is still very fine and powdery. There were little grass roots that were dangling from the sides of the hole,undamaged.No machine marks, no dirt outside the hole when found either. The very top of this hole is still basically how it looked when it was found. Woody is trying to dig down and around the entry/exit point in hopes to find a rare element. Part 2 coming soon with interviews and original still photos from right after it was found.

[300] Pine Ridge Reservation Part I: Where Despair Meets Hope

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implica...

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 1)

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there a...

published: 12 May 2012

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no...

published: 12 May 2012

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

published: 24 Feb 2018

Pine Ridge and Rosebud Indian Reservation

GANGLAND | Wild Boyz | FreeMovies.nu

The WildBoyz are the most feared gang on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. They ward off enemies by flashing a bear-claw tattoo, a nod to their Oglala Sioux heritage. The Wild Boyz are the largest of forty Native gangs that wreak havoc on Pine Ridge.
Episode aired 4 June 2010Gangland is a gritty, true-life documentary series exposing the world of history's most notorious and dangerous gangs. The Gangland series tells the insider story and we learn how the gangs shaped their times and affected the neighborhoods that they controlled. From the destruction wrought by the heroin kingpins in Harlem of the 1970s to today's most dangerous gang MS-13, which has spread out from the inner city to infect unexpected turf - suburban communities-gangs have a rich yet deadly history. T...

The Church at Pine Ridge

The Church at Pine Ridge tells the story of Moon's ChapelBaptist Church's week-long mission trip to hold a Vacation Bible School at the Pine Ridge Baptist Church in Batesland, South Dakota.
Missionaries Ken and Sherry Trivette moved to the Pine RIdge Indian Reservation in May of 2012, and have planted the Pine RIdge Baptist Church. Three years later, with a new church building, Ken and Sherry are reaching more of the people on the reservation now than ever.
Written and directed by Ethan D. Smith, this documentary tells the story of how 12 people from North Carolina helped minister to the people of the church and have fun with the children during a three night VBS.
More information about how you can contribute to the Pine Ridge Baptist Church is available at http://moonschapel.org.
...

Pine Ridge Indian Reservation Mission Trip

Shirley and Valinda shared some of their experiences from their South Dakota mission trip at the Sunday night service on July 1st. Other members of the mission team were there as well. See what these two ambassadors from LittleMountBaptist Church were able to accomplish in the name of the Lord. Some delicious finger foods were served after the presentation. This is a rolling slide show of photographs taken during the mission trip.

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

The WildBoyz are the most feared gang on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. They ward off enemies by flashing a bear-claw tattoo, a nod to their Oglala Sioux heritage. The Wild Boyz are the largest of forty Native gangs that wreak havoc on Pine Ridge.
Episode aired 4 June 2010Gangland is a gritty, true-life documentary series exposing the world of history's most notorious and dangerous gangs. The Gangland series tells the insider story and we learn how the gangs shaped their times and affected the neighborhoods that they controlled. From the destruction wrought by the heroin kingpins in Harlem of the 1970s to today's most dangerous gang MS-13, which has spread out from the inner city to infect unexpected turf - suburban communities-gangs have a rich yet deadly history. They usually start out as a form of protection for their members and community but then grow predatory as they feed on the very people that they purport to defend. With exclusive interviews and rarely seen footage, this is a raw look at life inside these gangs-from those who live it and the agencies that are working to stop them.
---------------------------
WATCH FREEMOVIESONLINE WITHOUT DOWNLOADING.
http://freemovies.nu

The WildBoyz are the most feared gang on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. They ward off enemies by flashing a bear-claw tattoo, a nod to their Oglala Sioux heritage. The Wild Boyz are the largest of forty Native gangs that wreak havoc on Pine Ridge.
Episode aired 4 June 2010Gangland is a gritty, true-life documentary series exposing the world of history's most notorious and dangerous gangs. The Gangland series tells the insider story and we learn how the gangs shaped their times and affected the neighborhoods that they controlled. From the destruction wrought by the heroin kingpins in Harlem of the 1970s to today's most dangerous gang MS-13, which has spread out from the inner city to infect unexpected turf - suburban communities-gangs have a rich yet deadly history. They usually start out as a form of protection for their members and community but then grow predatory as they feed on the very people that they purport to defend. With exclusive interviews and rarely seen footage, this is a raw look at life inside these gangs-from those who live it and the agencies that are working to stop them.
---------------------------
WATCH FREEMOVIESONLINE WITHOUT DOWNLOADING.
http://freemovies.nu

Pine Ridge Indian Reservation Mission Trip

Shirley and Valinda shared some of their experiences from their South Dakota mission trip at the Sunday night service on July 1st. Other members of the mission ...

Shirley and Valinda shared some of their experiences from their South Dakota mission trip at the Sunday night service on July 1st. Other members of the mission team were there as well. See what these two ambassadors from LittleMountBaptist Church were able to accomplish in the name of the Lord. Some delicious finger foods were served after the presentation. This is a rolling slide show of photographs taken during the mission trip.

Shirley and Valinda shared some of their experiences from their South Dakota mission trip at the Sunday night service on July 1st. Other members of the mission team were there as well. See what these two ambassadors from LittleMountBaptist Church were able to accomplish in the name of the Lord. Some delicious finger foods were served after the presentation. This is a rolling slide show of photographs taken during the mission trip.

Liquid genocide: fighting addiction on Pine Ridge reservation

Whiteclay, Nebraska is a tiny unincorporated town that sits on the border with South Dakota. Until its closure by state officials, its four liquor stores sold more than 4m cans of beer a year, almost entirely to members of Lakota Sioux tribe on the Pine RidgeIndian reservation, where the sale of alcohol is banned. The Guardian spent time on the reservation to understand the impact of alcohol on its residents – and the activists and Lakota tribe members determined to keep the town closed
View the video at https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/video/2017/sep/29/fighting-addiction-on-pine-ridge-reservation-video

1:21:53

Wild Boyz The Street Gangs Of Pine Ridge In America

Wild Boyz is a Native American homosexual gang based out of Pine Ridge, South Dakota prima...

[300] Pine Ridge Reservation Part I: Where Despair Meets Hope

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
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EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
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RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

40:48

Children of the Plains

On Friday, October 14th, 2011 the ABC television network aired "Hidden America: Children o...

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 1)

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
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11:49

Basketball on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Trans World Sport

Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala Lakota Sioux tribe. Covering an a...

Basketball on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation | Trans World Sport

Pine Ridge is home to over 30,000 members of the Oglala LakotaSioux tribe. Covering an area roughly the size of the state of Connecticut, it's an isolated place of both majestic beauty and abject poverty. It's considered to be the poorest part of the United States with around 85 per cent unemployment and the average family income is little more than 6,000 dollars a year. When it comes to sport, Basketball is by far the most popular here, as it is on most Indian Reservations. Many tribes promote the sport and see it as a way of keeping Native youths away from the problems of drugs and alcohol, which blight so many of their communities.
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TWS features sports action from around the globe, including reports from the biggest international competitions, in-depth features on lesser-known sports and profiles of rising stars of the future.
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First Project | Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

*DONATE TODAY: www.inourhands.love*
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inourhands.love has officially partnered with the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) Nation of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Their story is a paradigm of the hardships facing many American Indian tribes, but it is also representative of the resilience and hope that exists in community and innovation.
The Oglala Lakota faces many of the same economic challenges as other American Indian nations across the country. As HenryRed Cloud states in the video above, unemployment on the Pine Ridge Reservation, which has a population of 40,000, has reached a harrowing 86%. The median income of those who are employed is between $2,600-$3,500 a year, which means that 97% of the population lives below the federal poverty line.
Like their neighbors, the Standing Rock Sioux, the Oglala Lakota deal with the irony of pipelines running through their sovereign land, which the United States uses to transport oil that, eventually, American Indians are forced to buy back in the form of petroleum. By providing the Oglala Lakota Nation with a means of producing their own energy and jobs, inourhands.love helps keep that money on the reservation.
Working with LakotaSolar Enterprises (LSE) and the Red Cloud Renewable EnergyCenter (RCREC), inourhands.love aims to fund the installation of solar panels on Pine Ridge, providing clean and affordable energy to a region where nearly 40% of homes lack electricity.
inourhands.love believes that energy should be equitable and that all communities – and the individuals that comprise them – should have the agency to change and improve. For Native American Nations, the difficulties extend one step further; they are sovereign nations surrounded by a foreign government over which they have limited (or no) control but on which they are forced to depend for basic resources. While the past is marked by turmoil and injustice, there is hope, going forward, to create a brighter future, not only for disadvantaged communities, but for the world that we all share.
We’ve said this before and we’ll say it again: the most powerful gift is that of freedom; the ability to decide for oneself how the future will be. YOU have the power to return the freedom that some communities have lost to forces beyond their control.
By donating to inourhands.love, you directly contribute to transitioning communities like the Oglala Lakota Nation towards energy independence. Not only does your dollar create healthier and happier communities, it helps people reclaim their own destinies.

38:19

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservatio...

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

The collective geographical area of all reservations is 56,200,000 acres (22,700,000ha; 87,800sqmi; 227,000km2), approximately the size of Idaho. While most reservations are small compared to US states, there are twelve Indian reservations larger than the state of Rhode Island. The largest reservation, the Navajo Nation Reservation, is similar in size to West Virginia. Reservations are unevenly distributed throughout the country; the majority are west of the Mississippi River and occupy lands that were first reserved by treaty or 'granted' from the public domain.

GREENRIDGE -- Tigers track and field head coach Paul Fletcher had a vague vision when he rebooted the GreenRidge program ... His vision looked something like the scene Friday, May 18, with Green Ridge sophomore Alex Rebikh accepting a medal atop the state podium ... Junior and senior high combined, Green Ridge’s track and field team was the largest of the spring sports group Tuesday night....

[300] Pine Ridge Reservation Part I: Where Despair Meets Hope

Abby Martin Breaks the Set with exclusive coverage of Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota
LIKE Breaking the Set @ http://fb.me/BreakingTheSet
FOLLOW Abby Martin @ http://twitter.com/AbbyMartin
FOLLOW CodySnell @ https://twitter.com/codysnell
EPISODE BREAKDOWN: On this episode of Breaking the Set, Abby Martin talks about her trip to Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota, home to the Oglala Sioux tribe, a subset of the Lakota people and the second poorest county in the US. She first explores the notion of democratic governance by indigenous people centuries before western colonization and how the idea applies to the Lakota Sioux today. Abby than features a report from BTS producer Cody Snell about the tribe's vote to legalize alcohol on the reservation this past August and the implications prohibition has right now for both Pine Ridge and Whiteclay, Nebraska, a border town profiting immensely from the ban. Abby then remarks on the legacy of Leonard Peltier, a Lakota activist given two life sentences for the murder of two federal agents, despite the lack of evidence connecting him to the crime. BTS wraps up the show with an interview with Yvonne 'Tiny' DeCory, coordinator for the BEAR program, a self-sufficient organization that builds children's self-confidence through workshop and theatre in an effort to spread awareness and combat the sky high suicide rate plaguing Pine Ridge's youth.

40:48

Children of the Plains

On Friday, October 14th, 2011 the ABC television network aired "Hidden America: Children o...

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 1)

Part 2: http://youtu.be/DDTHDYb1CVM
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
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24:41

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In th...

'We Live to Survive': One Week with Lakota (Part 2)

Part 1 http://on.rt.com/xz6xbf
"We live to survive." That is what many of them say. In the19th century, the Lakota people were among the most successful fighters for freedom in the USA. But their land was eventually stolen, their language for years was forbidden to be taught in schools, and their freedom existed only on paper. This story was filmed during the first week of August in 2011 on the territory of Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. This is official land of the Oglala Lakota Nation nowadays.
Every year in August, Lakota people come to Pine Ridge from all over the world to celebrate their culture and traditions at the annual powwow. On the contrary of joy and happiness even during holiday there is a place for grief and misery. Many people have alcohol problems, there are no jobs or good housing. Lakota people are still fighting for their rights. But that gets harder to do every year.
Watch more on RT's documentary channel http://rtd.rt.com
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/b/102728491539958529040
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.

38:19

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservatio...

Saving Pine Ridge | Mission Trip Documentary - 2018

We had 134 people saved in 5 days of concetrated soul-winning on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. This MissionTrip was filled with adventure, unspeakable joy, fellowship and unforgettable experience(s). This is just some of the experience that we had during our time in South Dakota. Please continue to pray for this Reservation and that God would send forth many more labourers into this great harvest. I personally pray that this work will spark a revival within the Reservation itself. Feel free to Like, Comment & Share this video! #savingpineridge
Special thanks to PastorDonnieRomero and Stedfast Baptist Church!
Subscribe to them @ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLYJjgvjfyOM-GE69wN7vA

GANGLAND | Wild Boyz | FreeMovies.nu

The WildBoyz are the most feared gang on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. They ward off enemies by flashing a bear-claw tattoo, a nod to their Oglala Sioux heritage. The Wild Boyz are the largest of forty Native gangs that wreak havoc on Pine Ridge.
Episode aired 4 June 2010Gangland is a gritty, true-life documentary series exposing the world of history's most notorious and dangerous gangs. The Gangland series tells the insider story and we learn how the gangs shaped their times and affected the neighborhoods that they controlled. From the destruction wrought by the heroin kingpins in Harlem of the 1970s to today's most dangerous gang MS-13, which has spread out from the inner city to infect unexpected turf - suburban communities-gangs have a rich yet deadly history. They usually start out as a form of protection for their members and community but then grow predatory as they feed on the very people that they purport to defend. With exclusive interviews and rarely seen footage, this is a raw look at life inside these gangs-from those who live it and the agencies that are working to stop them.
---------------------------
WATCH FREEMOVIESONLINE WITHOUT DOWNLOADING.
http://freemovies.nu

45:56

BBC - The Natives: This is Our America (2017)

***DISCLAIMER - I do not own the rights to this video***
Documentary examining what life ...

Indian Reservation

Indian ReservationArtists: Paul Revere and the Raiders (peak Billboard position # 1 in 1971)Words and Music by John D. LoudermilkThey took the whole Cherokee nationPut us on this reservationTook away our ways of lifeThe tomahawk and the bow and knifeTook away our native tongueAnd taught their English to our youngAnd all the beads we made by handAre nowadays made in JapanCherokee people, Cherokee tribeSo proud to live, so proud to dieThey took the whole Indian nationLocked us on this reservationThough I wear a shirt and tieI'm still part redman deep insideCherokee people, Cherokee tribeSo proud to live, so proud to dieBut maybe someday when they learnCherokee nation will return, will return, will return, will return, will returnTranscribed by Ronald E. Hontzronhontzworldnet.att.net

GREENRIDGE -- Tigers track and field head coach Paul Fletcher had a vague vision when he rebooted the GreenRidge program ... His vision looked something like the scene Friday, May 18, with Green Ridge sophomore Alex Rebikh accepting a medal atop the state podium ... Junior and senior high combined, Green Ridge’s track and field team was the largest of the spring sports group Tuesday night....

YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan — The USS BlueRidge lit its boilers for the first time in two years this week, signifying a big step toward bringing the Navy’s oldest deployable warship back to sailing condition. As steam plumed from the 7th Fleet’s flagship late Tuesday evening, sailors who had watched the BlueRidge undergo various repairs, refurbishments and system upgrades since June 2016 felt a great sense of accomplishment....

It’s the final day of spring football games in the Volusia/Flagler area. Four local teams take the field on Thursday night to wrap up the 2017-18 athletic season.University’s new-look offense begins life after Lorenzo Lingard with a jamboree against Apopka and Pine Ridge... ....

For nearly 20 minutes Wednesday, the Marriotts Ridge boys lacrosse team kept Hereford’s attack from scoring a goal and the rest of the time, the No. 12 Mustangs were effective in the Class 2A state championship game. They executed their game plan to near perfection. Stay patient and deliberate... ....

MissingAttachment Missing Attachment Missing Attachment Missing Attachment Missing Attachment. ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK, Colo. — TrailRidgeRoad in Rocky Mountain National Park is expected to open for the season Friday. A spokesperson for the park sent us the pictures above and said the road should be ready for traffic on May 25, just in time for the Memorial Day holiday weekend. Crews started clearing the snow in April ... ....